Special report:
2008 Olympic
Games
BEIJING, July 3 (Xinhua) -- Chinese netizens have started
a new round of anti-France campaigning, targeting French President Nicolas
Sarkozy's threat to boycott the Beijing Olympics.
According to an online survey by www.sina.com.cn, a
popular Chinese website, by Thursday morning more than 89 percent of the 173,527
respondents do not want Sarkozy to attend the Olympic opening ceremony.
Only 7.8 percent of the participants voted they would
accept Sarkozy's presence at the ceremony while another 3.2 percent say they are
undecided.
The result of the survey came right after Sarkozy's
remark on Monday that whether he would attend the Olympic opening ceremony
depended on the progress of the latest talks between the Chinese government and
the private representatives of the Dalai Lama.
Sarkozy said he would give his answer next week at
the G8 Summit in Japan.
Over 88.2 percent of the surveyed said they found
Sarkozy's remarks about China "extremely unfriendly" and "not fit for a leader
of a major developed country", while about 10.3 percent consider his remarks
only political rhetoric.
In an online forum also posted on the same site, more
than 58,200 netizens expressed their dissatisfaction toward Sarkozy's China
remarks, with a landslide majority taking the stance that "China does not
welcome Sarkozy's presence at the Olympics".
Wu Yikang, chairman of the Shanghai Institute of
European Studies, said Sarkozy's inconsistency regarding China is not up to the
standard of a thoughtful and responsible statesman.
"Sarkozy's gesture of setting conditions for his
attendance at the Olympics is an unfriendly move toward China. It shows his
immaturity and carelessness as a politician," Wu was quoting as saying by
Thursday's China Daily.
"The Chinese government will certainly not yield to
his move," Wu said.
"In a visit to China last year, during which the two
countries signed business deals worth billions of euros, Sarkozy said he wanted
to 'book a seat' for the Olympics," he said.
"But after the March riot in Lhasa, the French leader
said he had not ruled out the possibility of personally boycotting the opening
of the Games in protest.
"Some people are acting as if China is begging them
to attend the Games," Wu said.
"But no one can achieve anything positive by linking the Games to politics," Wu said.
China opposes linking Tibet-related issues to Olympics
BEIJING, July 1 (Xinhua) -- China on Tuesday expressed resolute opposition to connecting Tibet-related issues with the Beijing Olympic Games.
Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao made the remarks in response to a question concerning French President Nicolas Sarkozy's recent comments about the Dalai Lama. Full story